Keziah Coffin eBook

The lock turned; the door opened and closed.
Grace, clinging to the balusters, heard Captain Hammond
cross the room, slowly and feebly. She heard
him enter the sitting room. Then she heard nothing
more, not another sound, though the minutes dragged
on and on, endlessly, eternally, and each with a message,
a sentence repeated over and over again in her brain.
“If she really cares for him, she won’t
let him ruin his life.”

By and by, pale, but more composed, and with her mind
made up, she came down into the hall. Drawing
a long breath, she turned into the sitting room to
face her uncle. By the light shining through the
dining-room door she saw him on his knees by the haircloth
sofa. She spoke his name. He did not answer
nor look up. Alarmed, she touched him on the shoulder.
At her touch his arm slid from the couch and he fell
gently over upon his side on the carpet.

CHAPTER XII

IN WHICH CAPTAIN EBEN MAKES PORT

Half past eight. In the vestry of the Regular
church John Ellery was conducting his prayer meeting.
The attendance was as large as usual. Three seats,
however, were vacant, and along the settees people
were wondering where Captain Elkanah Daniels and his
daughter might be. They had not missed a service
for many a day. And where was Keziah Coffin?

At the Come-Outer chapel the testifying and singing
were in full blast. But Ezekiel Bassett was leading,
for Captain Eben Hammond had not made his appearance.
Neither had Grace Van Horne, for that matter, but
Captain Eben’s absence was the most astonishing.

“Somethin’s the matter,” whispered
Josiah Badger to his right-hand neighbor. “Somethin’s
wrong d-d-d-down to the tavern, sartin’ sure.
I’m goin’ down there just soon’s
meetin’s over and f-f-f-find out. Eben
wouldn’t no more miss leadin’ his meetin’
from choice than I’d go without a meal’s
v-v-vi-vittles. Somethin’s happened and
I’m goin’ to know what ’tis.
You’ll go along with me, won’t ye, Lot?”

The answer was an affirmative. In fact, almost
every worshiper in that chapel had determined to visit
the Hammond tavern as soon as the service was at an
end.

In the Regular parsonage Keziah sat alone by the sitting-room
table. Prayer meeting and supper she had forgotten
entirely. The minister had not come home for
his evening meal, and food was furthest from the housekeeper’s
thoughts. What should she do? What ought
she to do? How could she avert the disaster so
certain to overwhelm those two young people the moment
their secret became known?

It was in vain that she tried to encourage herself
with the hope that Kyan had exaggerated—­that
the meetings in the grove had not been as frequent
as he said they were, or that they had been merely
casual. She knew better. She had seen the
pair together and the look in John Ellery’s
eyes. No, the mischief was done, they loved each
other; or, at least, he loved her. There was
the great trouble.